Walls, floors and rocks: England and its swastikas

England: a green and pleasant land... and home to a large number of swastikas, ancient and modern

Swastika. The word is a potent one. For more than one billion Hindus it means "wellbeing" and good fortune. For others, the cross with arms bent at right angles will forever symbolise Nazism. Yet England is seemingly awash with swastikas. Why?

It comes from the Sanskrit "svastika" and means "good to be", yet the word swastika - and perhaps even more the symbol which represents it - is very often taken to mean something very different.

The case is a perfect demonstration of the seismic shift in the swastika's reputation in the West as a result of its use by Nazi Germany.

Why did Adolf Hitler and the Nazis seize the swastika?

The Nazi party formally adopted the swastika - which it called the Hakenkreuz (hooked cross) - in 1920.

Dr Malcolm Quinn, of the University of Arts London, says the party picked up on the symbol's association with the Aryans, who some intellectuals of the time believed had invaded India in the distant past.

They considered the early Aryans of India to be the prototypical white invaders and the cultural ancestors of the German people.

Initially completed in the 17th Century, Burlington House features swastika shapes in its exterior stonework

"What Hitler did," says Dr Quinn, "was to add the swastika symbol (of a conquering 'race') to the colours of Bismarck's flag and Germany was rebranded as a nation whose central mission was conquest and colonisation.

"The Nazis created a new history for themselves. Within decades the swastika had been ripped from its Indian roots."

But the swastika - or at least the shape to which the word refers - predates Hitler by thousands of years.

Dr Jessica Frazier, of the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies, told the BBC swastikas had been found in China, Japan, Mongolia, the ancient Mediterranean, among native Americans and, of course, the British Isles.

"Its (the swastika's) original meaning is an enigma," she said. "Perhaps it is just an elegant geometry which has an instinctive appeal across the world."

The earliest swastikas might have had some religious or astronomical meaning. Then again, they might not.

One of those earliest "swastikas" is the Swastika Stone which sits proudly on the edge of Ilkley Moor in West Yorkshire.

The carving is thought to be early Bronze Age dating back to about 2,000 BC.

This swastika-inspired design appears on the The Foreign and Commonwealth Office in London

Now heavily eroded from the surface of the grit stone outcrop on which it sits, the design features a grooved swastika with a number of circular hollows.

The name Swastika Stone, as the Yorkshire-based archaeologist Dave Weldrake explains, is a Victorian invention. And a successful invention at that.

It pulls in the tourists not because it is the most elaborate carving on the moor but because of its name.

Mr Weldrake said it was most likely a religious carving.

This section of Essex County Council's headquarters was finished in 1939, the year Britain and Nazi Germany went to war. But the designs had been finalised years before

"But there's no written record," he said. "It is one of many carved rocks in the area which vary from the really simple to the highly elaborate.

"There is another one which looks partially on the way to being a swastika and there are others with ladder patterns. Part of the problem with interpretation is you don't know how they looked at the time."

Jump forward a few thousand years and the swastika motif reappears in England in thriving abundance.

Not on rocky outcrops now, but on buildings.

One of the plaques on the outside of India House in central London bears two swastikas

The British author Rudyard Kipling, who was strongly influenced by Indian culture, had a swastika on the dust jackets of all his books until the rise of Nazism.

Other swastika-based designs, including the Essex County Council building swastikas mentioned above, were most likely inspired by Greek patterns.

The Tympanum of St Andrew's Church, near Great Durnford in Wiltshire, features a design that resembles the swastika

Whatever their derivation, without knowing the intention of the architects who included such designs on churches, government buildings, banks and railway stations, referring to them as swastikas is problematic.

By and large, says Dr Quinn, they are "decorative motifs that happen to use the same symmetry group as the swastika symbol".

Common swastika myths

Many believe what separates the Hindu swastika from the Nazi swastika is that the latter is rotated by 45 degrees. Dr Malcolm Quinn says although the Nazi swastika was "often on a diagonal slant to suggest dynamism" this was not always the case.

Others have claimed the Nazi swastika has right facing arms and Hindu swastikas face left. This is wrong. The swastika always faces right. The left hand symbol is properly called the 'Swavastika', says Dr Quinn.

And they mostly predate Nazi Germany.

Shaunaka Rishi Das, director of the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies, says: "Most Western people when they see it (the swastika), they see Nazi Germany.

"But you have to understand that here's a tradition that is ancient and the Germans borrow it from a different culture and misuse it over less than two decades and it develops an internationally bad reputation."

Mr Rishi Das told how he himself once lived in a house in Belfast which had a tiled swastika on a wash-room floor.

"It somehow survived the fact that American officers were billeted there during the war," he said. "The daughter of the man who built the house, a well known architect of his time, told me the symbol was a Celtic one."

That house, he said, later became a Krishna Temple.

Although single swastika motifs - such as one found on cottages pictured below in Aylsham, Norfolk - are not rare, it is far more common to find swastikas used in repeating patterns.

A curving swastika design was used on these pebble flint cottages near Aylsham in Norfolk

Examples include those on the The Royal Academy of Arts building at Burlington House and the Foreign and Commonwealth Office in King Charles Street, London.

As Mr Rishi Das found in Belfast, walls are far from the only surfaces to carry the swastika. Floors carry them too.